Music’s emotional power stems from a mix of factors, only some of which we understand. Much about music resists full explanation. One thing we do know: Some of the magic has to do with dynamics: changes from soft to loud, or from loud to soft.

The most dramatic part of a song often coincides with a crescendo (when the music gets louder). That’s when everything kicks in, louder effects and guitar pedals come into play, and the engineer pushes the sliders up to 11. Just ask the Pixies, whose quiet verses and loud choruses Nirvana channeled for ‘90s game-changer “Smells Like Teen Spirit.”

Of course, getting loud isn’t the same thing, exactly, as being dramatic, and far from the only way in which music expresses drama.

Still, an artist, band, or producer often adds more instruments and vocals to the mix right at the highpoint of the song, and everyone (or every thing) tends to play a little bit louder, for maximum impact. And that is why Where Is The Drama works: detailed volume data from over 20 million songs, plus some clever tinkering, lets us hear the most ‘dramatic’ segment from any song on Spotify.

Methodology

Writes Lamere, “The app grabs the detailed audio analysis for the song from The Echo Nest. This includes a detailed loudness map of the song. This is the data I use to find the drama. To do so, I look for the part of the song with the largest rise in volume over the course of a 30 second window (longer songs can have a bit of a longer dramatic window). I give extra weight to crescendos that culminate in louder peaks (so if there are two crescendos that are 20dB in range but one ends at 5dB louder, it will win). Once I identify the most dynamic part of a song, I pad it a bit (so we get to hear a bit of the drop after the build).

“The rest is just UI – the song gets plotted as a heavily filtered loudness curve with the dramatic passage highlighted. I plot things with Highcharts, which is a pretty nifty javascript plotting and charting library. I recommend.” (more)

Comments

Music’s emotional power stems from a mix of factors, only some of which we understand. Much about music resists full explanation. One thing we do know: Some of the magic has to do with dynamics: changes from soft to loud, or from loud to soft.

The most dramatic part of a song often coincides with a crescendo (when the music gets louder). That’s when everything kicks in, louder effects and guitar pedals come into play, and the engineer pushes the sliders up to 11. Just ask the Pixies, whose quiet verses and loud choruses Nirvana channeled for ‘90s game-changer “Smells Like Teen Spirit.”